Interaction between thermally convecting basinal brines and organic matter in genesis of Upper Mississippi Valley zinc-lead district

- Organization:
- The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
- Pages:
- 9
- File Size:
- 5895 KB
- Publication Date:
- Apr 1, 1995
Abstract
Paper presented at the conference Economic geology in Europe and beyond II, models for mineral deposits in sedimentary basins, held in Keyworth, UK, 13-14 April 1994. The modified basinal brines, containing partly oxidised sulphur species, scavenged metals from basement rocks and sediments and transported them through the host rock, which contained local concentrations of organic matter. Reacting in various ways with the mineralising solution as temperatures at the sites of mineralisation changed, organic matter caused the precipitation and dissolution of a variety of minerals in the ore zones; it was organic matter that caused all of these reactions to occur at the same sites. Thus all components of the mineralising fluid - salt, water, heat, sulphur and metals - were obtained within the ore district. The siting of the mineral districts was related to the locations of faults through U- and Th-enriched granites beneath sediments containing basinal brines, and the locations of ore deposits within the districts were controlled by local concentrations of organic matter
Citation
APA:
(1995) Interaction between thermally convecting basinal brines and organic matter in genesis of Upper Mississippi Valley zinc-lead districtMLA: Interaction between thermally convecting basinal brines and organic matter in genesis of Upper Mississippi Valley zinc-lead district. The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining, 1995.